A Foundation Takes on Wikipedia's Africa Gap, While Backing Young Creatives on the Continent

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A Foundation Takes on Wikipedia's Africa Gap, While Backing Young Creatives on the Continent
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A Foundation Takes on
Wikipedia’s Africa Gap,
While Backing Young
Creatives on the
Continent
Ade Adeniji

                                      If you’re a creative type,
                                      you’ve likely heard of
                                      the Moleskine
                                      notebook, branded as
                                      the heir to the little
                                      blank books used by the
                                                                                Follow the
                                                                                 Money!
MOLESKINE FOUNDATION CEO ADAMA
SANNEH (LEFT) AT WIKIAFRICA
EDUCATION EVENT.
                                      likes of van Gogh,
                                      Picasso and                          Want to get inside funders'
                                      Hemingway. Maybe you                  heads? Sign up for our
                                                                                email updates.
even picked one up during quarantine in the hopes
of one day being known by surname only.
Headquartered in Milan, the Moleskine company                               Email Address

has around 500 employees today and a vast network
A Foundation Takes on Wikipedia's Africa Gap, While Backing Young Creatives on the Continent
of partners. It produces physical and digital
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notebooks, and even runs cafes.

                                                        Featured Jobs
In 2006, the company launched the Moleskine
Foundation, which works with an eye toward Africa       Find Jobs
at the intersection of three focus areas: innovative    Executive Director / Philanthropy Officer

education, art and culture for social transformation,   - Southern California TAA Chapter

and advocacy.                                           Los Angeles, CA - Tourette Association

                                                        of America
“Creativity is a function of knowledge to a certain
                                                        Vice President of
extent. It’s not just about having information. It’s
                                                        Development/Fundraising
about what you’re going to do with it,” says Adama
                                                        Chicago, IL - Black Ensemble Theater
Sanneh, CEO and co-founder of Moleskine
Foundation, in a recent interview.                      LATIN AMERICA MAJOR GIFTS OFFICER

                                                        Remote, Southeast - Island Conservation

The foundation began as lettera27—an
                                                        Program Officer
“unconventional cultural incubator”—illustrating
                                                        Houston, TX - Episcopal Health
the unique philanthropic angle here. And though
                                                        Foundation
“incubating culture” might seem a bit nebulous,
Sanneh spoke at length about Moleskine’s real           Learning & Evaluation Consultancy

impact on the ground, and how it uses creativity as a   Remote, Midwest - Astraea Lesbian

path toward social change.                              Foundation for Justice

                                                              Post a Job      More jobs
Consider its WikiAfrica Education initiative, which
                                                            Powered by
launched in 2006 just five years after Wikipedia
itself launched. Harnessing the promise of
creativity, the initiative has generated over 40,000
Wikipedia contributions since its launch, and over
200 articles in 18 languages about COVID-19 in the
past year alone. The goal is to serve as a way to
support creative young people on the continent, and
also to improve online information about Africa.

But just how did this unconventional foundation get
started, why did it partner with Wikimedia, and how
is the partnership emblematic of the foundation’s
overall aims to impact African youth?

African roots
A Foundation Takes on Wikipedia's Africa Gap, While Backing Young Creatives on the Continent
Born in Italy as the son of a Muslim West African
father and an Italian Catholic mother, Sanneh has
long been interested in questions of identity. His
honors thesis as a political science major in
undergrad was titled “Identity Paradox in the
Second Generation of Immigrants in Italy.” He got
his feet wet in the world of NGOs, working in
Northern Uganda and the capital city Kampala.

After a time, though, Sanneh wondered if he was on
the right side of history. “Where was I in the overall
international aid machine? Even though we were
reaching many people and making a difference… I
didn’t feel like I was part of the right system,” he
says.

Sanneh went on to earn his MBA from the
University of Geneva and then worked as a
consultant for the World Intellectual Property
Organization, a specialized agency of the United
Nations. Working within the Global Challenges
Division, he started to realize the power of creative
tools to solve global challenges like climate change
and food security.

“I entered in the field of art, culture, and education
and had a slow but steady epiphany,” Sanneh says
with a laugh. “A lot of the questions I had in
Uganda, I started to find some answers to.”

Using creativity to change the world

As lettera27 evolved into Moleskine Foundation, the
company behind the organization doubled down its
support so that the nonprofit could scale. While
backed by the Moleskine company, it operates
independently, running its own programs and
partnerships while also making grants to aligned
organizations.
A Foundation Takes on Wikipedia's Africa Gap, While Backing Young Creatives on the Continent
And with Sanneh at the helm, the foundation was
able to get off the ground quickly, thanks to
lettera27’s 10-year runway creating partnerships
with cultural, creative and educational institutions
around Africa.

Consider partner organization Constitution Hill in
Johannesburg, a former prison complex from the
Apartheid era whose walls held the likes of Nelson
Mandela and Mahatma Gandhi. Today, Constitution
Hill is a living museum that tells the story of South
Africa’s journey to the present. The foundation has
been working with the organization for years, and
others like it, even when it wasn’t the popular
choice.

“Ten years ago, some looked at you like you were
some kind of New Age person. But very early on in
the game, we had the chance to meet some
incredible partners,” he says.

Moleskine Foundation works to encourage, inspire
and connect young people to transform themselves
and then larger society through unconventional
educational experiences. One past initiative called
the Director’s Eye supported authors and producers
of African cinema throughout the phases of film
development and production.

The foundation also has a long history with Ashoka,
the well-known international association of social
innovators, and was an early supporter of Ashoka’s
Changemaker Schools Africa, which has launched
dozens of schools and also runs storytelling
workshops.

“Where is Africa on Wikipedia?”
A Foundation Takes on Wikipedia's Africa Gap, While Backing Young Creatives on the Continent
As a top-five global website with some 6.1 billion
visitors per month, Wikipedia is as ubiquitous as the
air we breathe, and the perfect mic drop in an
intense internet debate—not that I’m encouraging
such a thing. Still, as with many other internet era
phenomena, Wikipedia wasn’t always Wikipedia.

“In 2006, lettera27 had an intuition,” Sanneh says.
“Where is Africa on Wikipedia? It was intuition,
because at the time, Wikipedia wasn’t even a big
deal. And I was just a young volunteer.”

The organization decided to make an early bet,
partnering with Wikimedia Italia to launch
WikiAfrica, an international movement that
encourages individuals, interested groups and
organizations to create, expand and enhance online
content about Africa.

WikiAfrica Education introduces, trains and
supports teachers as they incorporate Wikipedia
article writing into their lesson plans. The initiative
conducts edit-a-thon events so they can learn more
about the Wikimedia platform and supports teacher
training. Students learn important literacy skills,
how to work in collaboration, and best practices and
tools relating to critical thinking. The ultimate goal
is to build the next generation of online content
creators.

“I can tell you, there is more information about the
city of Paris now than about the entire African
continent,” Sanneh says; he knows the consequences
of the lack of online representation for people of
color. He recalls the first time he landed in New
York and met a Black American, who asked where
Sanneh was from. When he said Italy, the man was
surprised.
“He’s like, ‘Wait, Italy has Black people?’” Sanneh
recalls with a smile.

For these reasons, WikiAfrica is focused on the
entire diaspora, impacting people around the world
who know what it means to live in a society where
you aren’t fully reflected. For instance, Moleskine, in
partnership with Constitution Hill and AFROPUNK
(conveners of the popular Brooklyn music festival),
curated the names of 12 Black South African women
who were erased from history.

WikiAfrica created an educational program in which
young people could learn about women like Joyce
Seroke, a South African educator, activist, feminist
and community organizer who fought against
apartheid. From there, young people wrote these
entries in their own languages—Zulu, Xhosa, Venda
and so on.

In one day, the event produced 70 new entries in
five African languages about these vital figures.

Another larger “AfroCuration” event focused on the
constitution of South Africa and anti-Apartheid
efforts, and resulted in more than 200 written
articles. Between these two events combined, there
were more than 200,000 views from these entries in
a few months.

Moleskine Foundation only works with local
partners who know the lay of the land and can
effectively host events, like Harambee, a youth
employment nonprofit. And right now, Sanneh is
working hard to find multiple avenues to reach rural
areas.

“Sometimes, it’s a struggle,” Sanneh admits, “but
compared to when we started, this is a great
improvement. This is why we want to expand this
program, and get more co-founding donors.”

A new perception of creativity

Sanneh believes that these creativity tools can be
used to get at some of Africa’s more intractable
challenges, including housing, water sanitation and
food security. But as veteran of this space, he also
thinks some reframing could be useful.

“International organizations always ask how they
can fix problems. But they never really ask how they
can support and develop talent. We are in this
second business. I don’t see a dichotomy. We live in
a creativity era.… Why should it be different for a
young kid in Lagos?” Sannah says.

Moleskine Foundation works on three levels, and its
final frontier is working to transform the way
creativity is perceived in society. The foundation
created a publication called Folio and a podcast
called Creativity Pioneers, in-depth conversations
with leaders who use creativity to create social
change. Harvard graduate Uzodinma Iweala, CEO of
Africa Center in New York City, talks about building
inclusive cultural institutions, and Raphael
Chikukwa, executive director of the National Gallery
of Zimbabwe, believes that “every revolution starts
from the revolution of the mind.”

When I ask Sanneh if he believes this work could
help westerners better understand Africa, he says he
remains hopeful. But he also says he’s not overly
concerned by it, because you can’t really change
those who don’t want to change.

African creators themselves are undergoing a new
era of visibility around the world, including through
Afrobeats music and so-called “Nollywood”
(Nigerian Hollywood) films. Afrobeats artist Burna
Boy took home a 2021 Grammy, and was also
featured in video game sensation Grand Theft Auto
Online.

Three decades ago, Ashoka made early waves in
what’s now the established field of social
entrepreneurship. If successful, Sanneh thinks
Moleskine Foundation can follow the same
trajectory as a pioneer in the space of creativity for
social change. “We now know how to attract
resources, to nurture talent, to bring solutions, and
serve millions of people.”

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